Indiana's George Hill Releases 'All Gold Everything Pacers' Rap Song

Indiana Pacers guard George Hill released a rap song, "All Gold Everything Pacers," just before the NBA playoffs began. He, along with a few of his friends—one of whom included Mike Epps—wrote and recorded the song in less than 48 hours.

“With Mike Epps and I being from here, we thought it would be a good collaboration,” Hill told Scott Agness of Pacers.com. “We just had fun and tried to interact with the fans and get the fans involved. That’s what we tried to do.”

To their credit, the idea was good. Great, even.

Playing off of Trinidad James' "All Gold Everything" (NSFW language) made sense because, well, the Pacers wear all gold (and blue). And being a native of Indianapolis, who better to pay tribute to the city, its team, players and the fans than Hill himself?

The execution, while somewhat comical, did have a local feel to it. Here's an excerpt from Hill's not-so-masterul rendition (via Agness):

All I bleed is blue / old-school but it’s new / shout out to Broad Ripple because I do this for you / I started from the bottom, 34th is my home / my jump shot is too sweet and it tastes just like Long’s / a trey-ball or layup, to me it’s all the same / it feels like the West Rink when I’m skating all in that lane

Don't you just see a Grammy in Hill's future? Yeah, me neither.

A few parts of the song were downright hysterical and pointed out the obvious.